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The arts will continue to flourish in Northwest Philadelphia thanks in part to recent Philadelphia Cultural Fund grant awards.

Numerous neighborhood arts and cultural organizations from the Northwest — 32 of 285 citywide — are among the recipients of nearly $2.5 million allocated to support general operations.

Last year, City Council voted to increase PCF’s budget to pre-recession levels. It was cut nearly in half, from $3.2 million to $1.84 million, back in 2010. There is concern that Mayor Nutter’s proposed 2016 budget will again slash funding.

Seven in Germantown’s historic district alone will benefit from this year’s PCF grants, including Historic Germantown, a consortium of 16 partner sites.

“The support is really essential to the work we do,” said Trapeta Mayson, executive director for Historic Germantown.

Preserving history and community

The money will help fund the community events and workshops the organization puts on, including its Second Saturday program. Every second Saturday from May through Oct., all of the member historic sites are open to the public and staffed by guides between noon and 4 p.m.

Because all of the consortium member sites are nonprofit and work with shoestring budgets, they have limited open times. Often these dates do not align with those of the other sites. This can be frustrating to visitors to the area, explained Pilar Yaekel, Historic Germantown’s operations manager.

Tying multiple sites together during the tourist high-season not only facilitates visitation but showcases the neighborhood, she added.

Both the consortium and its member sites (which have their own operations budgets and directors) provide free programming for youth and outreach services to the community.

Doing so is especially challenging in the nonprofit environment, Mayson said.

Historic Germantown is committed to being relevant in its neighborhood, but without the support of the PFC, hard choices would have to be made on what programs, if any, they can continue to offer.

“We’re not just these houses and institutions. We’re part of the community,” she said.